Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti is Now Streaming on ZEE5 — Your Weekend Rescue Thriller is Here

Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shkati
New Releases

“Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti” arrives on ZEE5 as the kind of action drama that respects your time and your nerves. It’s brisk, procedural, and focused on the anatomy of a rescue—how elite operators plan, adapt, and risk everything when the margin for error is measured in seconds. The hook is simple: a sacred space under siege, an NSG unit led by a still-waters-run-deep officer, and a city holding its breath. The pay-off is cleaner still: tension earned through tactics rather than noise.

If you want similar high-adrenaline picks after this one, browse the Movies hub and stack your weekend queue with more action-forward titles and 2025 movies—then circle back to this film when you’re ready for a precise, procedural hit.

Operation Vajra Shakti: The Plot in One Breath

A live threat at the Akshardham temple sets the clock ticking. Major Hanut Singh, leading an NSG unit, must stage a rescue that balances hostages, shifting intel and the ache of an earlier mission that still shadows his judgment. What separates Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti from loud, disposable action is its procedural spine—stacking, comms discipline, corridor clears, split-second calls—shot in a way that keeps you at eye-level with the operators rather than above the map. The war movie frames the central question cleanly: Can Hanut confront his past in time to save the present?

What It’s Based on (And How The Film Handles It)

Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti is inspired by the 2002 Akshardham Temple attack in Gandhinagar and the counter-operation that followed. The film uses that tragic event as scaffolding for a focused mission narrative, staying respectful in tone while leaning into the “how” of special-ops decision-making. It’s not a documentary reconstruction; it’s a thriller that honours the contours of the real incident by foregrounding method, teamwork, and the stakes of hesitation.

Cast & Characters: Who Plays Whom (Each Gets Their Moment)

Akshaye Khanna — Major Hanut Singh
Khanna anchors the film as the NSG team lead, a professional first and a symbol second. Hanut’s steadiness and internal reckoning guide the tempo of the mission—decisions are measured, commands are minimal, and the authority comes from process, not posture.

Chandan Roy — Mohsin
Chandan Roy steps in as Mohsin, a presence that widens the film’s perspective beyond the operators alone. His scenes are played with economy—no wasted gestures, just the kind of lived-in detail that adds texture to the operational field.

Mridul Das — Farooq
Mridul Das’s Farooq helps the narrative sketch the antagonist grid without turning it into a caricature. He’s part of the machinery the commandos must outthink under pressure, and the performance slots cleanly into the film’s tactics-over-speechmaking approach.

Akshay Oberoi — Capt. Bibek
As Captain Bibek, Akshay Oberoi reads like the sharp edge of the stack—precise, quick on uptake, and integral to the room-entry calculus that gives the action its readability. The captain’s rank isn’t just on the shoulder; it’s in the decisiveness.

Abhilash Chaudhary — Iqbal
Abhilash Chaudhary’s Iqbal provides a clear line to the opposing plan, keeping the stakes specific rather than abstract. It’s an unfussy turn that supports the film’s emphasis on logistics, leverage and timing.

Note: Additional credited roles seen across reliable listings include Gautam Rode (Major Samar) and Vivek Dahiya (Capt. Rohit Bagga), among others, who round out the operator roster and command-room dynamic. Their character attributions appear consistently across industry databases and platform guides.

Why Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti is a Perfect Weekend Watch

  • Pace that respects you. At under two hours, Operation Vajra Shakti builds, executes, and breathes without padding. You get set-up, breach, aftermath—the classic A-to-B-to-C arc—without detours.
  • Action you can read. The action film’s geography is clean. You always understand who’s moving where, why the corridor matters, and how the team’s timing threads the needle.
  • Emotion without sermonising. The film carries a patriotic feeling, yes, but the director keeps the words subdued and lets the actions speak for themselves. When someone opens the door, they do not want to talk; they bring in a hostage.
  • A lead who holds the frame. Akshaye Khanna plays Hanut as a professional first, a symbol second. The gravity comes from the process, not the posture.

Who Should Watch Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti?

  • Viewers who prefer tactics-forward thrillers over empty bombast.
  • Fans of mission storytelling where geography is readable and the stakes are human.
  • Someone wants a short, Hindi movie that gives real feelings and skips preaching.

Here’s How to Watch on ZEE5 (easy steps)

  1. Open ZEE5 on the web, mobile app, smart TV, or streaming stick.
  2. Find Akshardham: Operation VajraShakti by searching.
  3. Select the movie, set Hindi and English subtitles if you want, and play it.
  4. Save this movie for your weekend. The film’s length and tempo make it ideal for a Saturday or Sunday evening sit-down—tense, contained, and done before the snacks run out.

A Note on Tone—and Why It Works

Thrillers drawn from real-world pain walk a narrow line. Operation: Vajra Shakti keeps that balance by foregrounding discipline and duty, showing the operators’ craft without drowning the frame in spectacle. The result is a film that asks you to lean in: to notice the breath before the breach, the silence after a command, and the cost of getting a decision wrong. That restraint is not just tasteful; it’s dramatically effective.

Make An Event of It

Turn your living room into a mission control: dim the lights, silence the phones, keep the snacks within reach. Let Akshardham: Operation Vajra Shakti, streaming among new movies on ZEE5, build its pressure one hallway at a time. When the credits roll, you’ll have a story to talk about—not because it shouted, but because it executed.

Bio of Author: Gayatri Tiwari is an experienced digital strategist and entertainment writer, bringing 20+ years of content expertise to one of India’s largest OTT platforms. She blends industry insight with a passion for cinema to deliver engaging, trustworthy perspectives on movies, TV shows and web series.